Love Affairs: The Therapeutic Guide to Sound Thinking and Smart Moves after Infidelity
By (Author) Joel Block Ph.D.
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
2nd April 2018
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Psychology
Psychotherapy: couples and families
306.736
Winner of 2019 IPPY Award Silver Medal in Sexuality/Relationships Category 2019
Hardback
184
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
A psychologist specializing in couples therapy provides an honest and compassionate guide to dealing with a spouse's or partner's love affair, from the one-night stand to the grand amour. As a result of innovative technologies and a globalized world, temptation and opportunity often intersect, allowing infidelity to increasingly create problems between spouses, partners, and other couplings in which at least one person expects exclusive intimacy. In this timely work, noted couples therapist Joel Block examines the challenges of affairs, including types of affairs; their motivations and effects; and how to repair and improve a relationship, or part ways, after an affair. Questions addressed include: "What is the motivation", "Is it a result of deep dissatisfaction Or not a reflection of the relationship at all", and "Can relationships be affair-proofed" Providing vignettes from the author's therapy sessions to illustrate points, the book also explains how to respond to discovery; minimize disruption in the lives of children; and when separation or divorce is the chosen solution, understand new modes of "conscious de-coupling" that keep post-breakup life stable as well as satisfying. A lifeline for recovering from crisis, this text will interest general readers looking for advice to react to, cope with, or avoid infidelity, as well as students and professionals in the fields of psychology, counseling, and social work.
Joel Block, PhD, is an award-winning psychologist practicing couples and sex therapy on Long Island, New York. He has been a practicing counseling and clinical psychologist for 40 years and is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association division for Couple and Family Therapy.